Android beta participants can test the new multi-word and undo autocorrect features.

Auto-correct has served up some interesting word suggestions, but how about entire sentences?

SwiftKey on Monday launched the experimental Clarity Keyboard Beta, an Android keyboard that promises to help users focus on what they're typing, while offering various autocorrect options to quicken the pace.

Beta participants can test SwiftKey's new multi-word autocorrect, which checks the last few words you've typed. With an entire sentence for added context, the app can better understand that you meant to write "chicken noodle soup" instead of "Chuck Norris soup."

And, in the rare instance you actually are talking about Chuck Norris soup, Clarity users can undo an autocorrection and restore the original wording with a quick tap of the delete key.

Bad, bad , bad. This is the scourge of the age. This week I sent a couple of emails without checking the content before hitting the send button. One email contained an address in Purley Surrey which got converted into Purely. The other email mentioned medicals which got converted into medical school. Isn't modern technology wonderful?